CPO, Marketing and HR write Riveron 5-star reviews - Anonymous employee Riveron Employee Review

1.0
Sep 25, 2020
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

People are bright, creative and work hard. (middle management, and associates)

Cons

Company is a ruse. Presents themselves as a consulting firm, they are a white collar 'staffing agency' that chases after jobs to fill in for controllers, CFO's. Minimal repeat clients, they are 'one hit wonder' sweat shop. Marketing and their CPO write their glassdoor reviews. Not even creative enough to change up the reviews. Make up statements such as; "Love working here, it is so much better than the Big 4." They pouch from the Big 4 - hunting season right after audit season when associates are burned out from their long hours and disenfranchised at PwC, E&Y, KMPG. Read between the lines on the consistent 'same' language used in reviews of this company. Monosyllabic in reviews and they are not very bright.

avatar
Riveron Response
5y
Thank you for your review. If you have additional concerns, contact Riveron HR or your performance advisor.

Explore other reviews about Riveron

5.0
Jun 19, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Flexibility Opportunity Sharp colleagues Additional incentives

Cons

Working hours Remote work Unclear upside path

1.0
Apr 9, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Decent swag and they have education stipends. Allows remote work which was very appreciated.

Cons

Too political and heavy on finger-pointing rather than collaboration. Blame often falls on inexperienced staff for issues beyond their control, while "who you know" (especially in the Texas office) dictates accountability. Additionally, the US team’s subconscious bias toward the India team creates a counterproductive and unwelcome environment. It ultimately feels like a fend-for-yourself environment. When performance is evaluated, support is limited unless you’ve already proven you can meet management’s demanding, often unrealistic, expectations. This makes it especially difficult for early-career professionals to learn and grow. The focus tends to be more on maximizing billable hours than on development or quality of work. In some cases, there has even been pressure from multiple managers to inflate timesheet entries to improve the appearance of performance and increase client billing, despite work being completed efficiently. These expectations were consistently communicated verbally rather than documented, raising serious ethical concerns and making the situation even more discouraging.

2
See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All